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Daredevil - Season 2 Episodes 9-12 Review

May 4, 2016

The end is here. After an explosive start and meandering middle, the second season of Daredevil comes to a close, with an up and down home stretch that has some cool moments, but ultimately lacks a satisfying conclusion to its major story lines. The most disappointing aspect of this season has to be the unanswered questions left behind by the Elektra arc- what exactly is the Hand’s objective? What is the Black Sky? We know the Hand’s underlying plan involves harvesting children's blood, lacing it with toxins, and reintroducing it back into their bodies, but what this is supposed to accomplish remains a mystery. The warehouse pit from episode six never gets addressed again despite seeming like a very significant plot point. And, in a noticeable bit of Replacement no Jutsu (yes, that is a Naruto reference for those of you keeping score at home), the writers immediately shift all of our attention to the season’s "big reveal"- that Elektra is in fact the Black Sky, the mysterious “object” of the Hand’s desire.

While this reveal should have been quite impactful, our lack of connection to Elektra, and the missing explanation behind the Black Sky, causes our reaction to fall flat. And I get it- it's not fair to expect all of these loose ends to be wrapped up in a neat and tidy bow. Daredevil will presumably have a third season that builds on these dangling plot points (though, there's currently speculation that the show might be in danger of cancellation); and in a way, it's also responsible for setting up future Netflix shows, such as Iron Fist and the team-up series, The Defenders. It's very possible that we'll see one or both of these shows revisit the Hand, especially given Iron Fist's East-Asian influences, and The Defenders' need for an overarching "big bad." From a pure story-telling point of view, this twist does its job in that it’s relatively unexpected and provides a palatable obstacle for our protagonist to overcome. However, while Daredevil doesn't need to show its entire hand to be enjoyable, the mysteries it teases should at least be compelling enough to assure audiences that the payoff will be worth the wait, something it wasn't able to accomplish with its Elektra arc.

The fallout of Nelson & Murdock ends up being one of the season's weaker subplots. We just aren’t invested enough in the Matt-Foggy relationship, to care when it all comes crumbling apart. There's nothing gripping about the two going their separate ways because it doesn't really feel like they're that great of friends anyway. All of their friendship building took place in season one, while season two mostly saw them at odds with one another. Foggy's arc stalls significantly during the latter part of the season, as he is sidelined by the bullet he takes in episode ten. However, his story line does take an interesting turn in the season finale, when he accepts a new job offer from none other than Jessica Jones' Jeri Hogarth.

So far, the references between Marvel's two Netflix properties have been subtle, with the most significant crossover being nurse Claire's one-episode appearance in Jessica Jones. But, as much as I'd love for Daredevil and Jessica Jones to dive right into each other’s adventures, I understand and appreciate the need for the slower, more deliberate approach Marvel is taking in establishing this shared fictional universe. In this regard, the teaming up of Foggy and Hogarth gives us a nice compromise. We don’t necessarily get the full-on, worlds-colliding effect of a Matt Murdock-Jessica Jones introduction, but Foggy and Hogarth are both significant supporting characters in their respective series, and their interactions, presumably in the next season of Jessica Jones, will give us a genuine feeling of connectivity between Marvel's Netflix series.

The highlight of this season is easily Jon Bernthal’s Punisher, though it's too bad that his story line ultimately gets pushed into the background in favor of Elektra and the Hand. The action sequences really reach a new level with the Punisher’s prison hallway and diner fight scenes. Choreographer Philip Silvera does a fantastic job of portraying Frank Castle's ruthlessness, and capturing his efficient, tactical fighting style- a welcome change of pace from this season's ubiquitous ninja fights. The Punisher arc also provides a unique dynamic by exploring the growing friendship between Castle and Karen Page. We get a lot of growth from Karen this season, and she steadily rises to the top of my list of favorite characters. This increase in likability is intrinsically tied to her heavy involvement in the season's superior story line; however, Karen's compassion for Castle and cleverness in pursuing leads for his case also gives her character an appealing human element that is sorely missing from the brooding Matt Murdock and underused Foggy.

Unfortunately, the Punisher plot-line ends on a rather disappointing note, as the Blacksmith reveal falls quite flat relative to the season-long build-up. Jessica Jones suffered similarly with finding an appropriate ending for one of its major arcs, and it’s possible that Netflix shows, in general, would be better served by shortening their seasons from thirteen episodes to ten, allowing plot points to conclude in a more timely, organic fashion, rather than getting dragged out to cheaply fill screen time. There's an argument to be made that a volatile character like Frank Castle is best used in small doses, and that a larger presence would have quickly worn out his welcome. But, in a season without an overarching villain like Wilson Fisk, I think the writers could have leveraged a bit more screen time for one of their most compelling characters.

Overall, this was an uneven second season for Marvel's flagship Netflix series. Things start off, quite literally, with a bang, but after The Punisher is seemingly brought to justice in the fourth episode, the show fails to keep its momentum going as it shifts its focus towards Elektra and the Hand. This change is so stark, in fact, that the first four episodes almost feel like an entirely different (and better) show. Daredevil season two is by and large an entertaining addition to the MCU; however, its faults are hard to overlook after the universally-acclaimed Jessica Jones showed us just how a good a Marvel Netflix series can be. At the very least, Daredevil provides a satisfying amount of world-building for Marvel's burgeoning Netflix universe, and continues to eclipse its broadcast counterpart, Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D., in terms of quality. In today's world of streaming and cord-cutting, Netflix remains the future of television, and will allow Marvel to explore their properties more creatively than they ever could with cable. In this sense, Daredevil season two succeeds in laying the groundwork for this future to soon unfold.


Garrett Yoshitomi is a contributor for A Play on Nerds. He covers Marvel films and television, and enjoys fantasy baseball, Big Brother live feeds, and Anna Kendrick. You can find his tweets @garrettweets

In television, review, article Tags daredevil, foggy, netflix, punisher, kingpin, karen, karen paige, electra, elektra, streaming, marvel, marvel cinematic universe, mcu, disney
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Fear the Walking Dead - "Blood in the Streets" - Season 2 Episode 4 Review

May 3, 2016

In the dark of night, a butt-naked heroin addict swims toward shore.  He catches his breath and goes ashore.  We know there are other people out there, definitely bad people, but perhaps good as well, but none with search boats and helicopters.  It’s a strange scene that Nick wanders into.  He’s in a newly abandoned camp, full of tents and RVs and barrel fires.  The salty wind whipping everything to and fro creates a properly ominous atmosphere.  While TWD has that overgrown post-apocalyptic set design down, FTWD is really creative I think in creating that brand new apocalypse aesthetic.  Using stealth and misdirection, Nick lures a walker into its second death, and drags the body into a tent so he will be undisturbed in eviscerating it and covering himself with blood.  Nick never ceases to amuse with his cleverness.  Properly gored, he sets to the next part of his quest as the title burns across the screen.

Travis and Maddie weigh the pros and cons of trusting Strand in light of his axe job last episode.  This is the first time Travis has wanted to do anything to a person besides talk it out with them, but if only for the promise of a Mexican hideaway, Maddie advises against this.  Meanwhile Chris and Ofelia have a chat about teenage romance and finding the bliss of hormonal youth at the end of the world.  As if the phrase “making bad decisions” manifested itself, the two find a raft swiftly approaching with two men and a pregnant woman in labor aboard.  Before anyone knows what’s going on the survivors are begging for help and as the crew of the Abigail wake up one by one, it’s clear that things are going to get messy one way or another.  Strand stalks unseen, but learns what’s happening.

Source: AMC

It’s pretty ridiculous that Alicia can sleep so soundly when all hell is breaking loose on the boat.  Even with all the shouting she casually dresses herself and tries to figure out what’s going on when it dawns on her that one of the voices she hears is her Dream Phone boyfriend and murderous pirate, Jack.  Rather than play dumb she calls him out and three scrawny yuppies get the drop on the entire boat and take them hostage.  These people have no chance of survival.  If they keep dropping their guard like this it’ll be hard to stretch that kind of stupidity into a whole season.  Still, Chris seems rather miffed at his captors, especially the shit talker Reed, and it appears Strand has slipped away, after finding Daniel took the magazine from his gun.  We are meant to think the pirates clipped him with a potshot during the getaway, but we’ll see how this shit-show shakes out.

Source: AMC

An interesting flashback plays out between Strand and a new friend at a bar as they watch the aftermath of Katrina on the TV.  They’re seemingly both in the real estate game and thusly new friends, until it’s clear Strand can hold his liquor better than his friend and though he’s chivalrous enough to help a drunk buddy, it’s not without its price.  Strand is not only a great con man, but a thief as well.  Still, his situation doesn’t seem so great as the raft is all but deflated and his phone is wet.

Aboard Abigail, Travis avoids getting Chris executed by Reed by promising to start the boat without the keys, which Strand presumably has.  Jack and Alicia go looking for a radio, with which they will contact the mysterious Connor.  She tries to get into Jack’s head, trying to fix the huge mess she’s made, but in very teen drama “boo hoo you lied I don’t like you” way.  Nick, safely covered in walker guts, continues his expedition into an abandoned luxury home tract.  He has an address written down but for what?

Source: AMC

Flashing back to Strand’s great con, the man he robbed catches up with him some time later and presents himself as none other than Thomas Abigail.  Not all ships are named after women, I suppose.  He’s got a henchman with him but it seems that he’s more interested in Strand than he is in the money that was stolen.  Back on the water, Strand is far less competent and loses the phone. 

Aboard Abigail our heroes finally start coming up with a play, realizing far too late that they outnumber their captors.  Maddie and Daniel poise themselves to move against the pregnant Vida, using tactics not unlike the ones used back when Maggie and Carol were taken in TWD.  Travis meanwhile bluffs Reed and gets taken down to the engine room where he hides a crowbar in his sleeve.  I’m not saying an English teacher couldn’t know a thing or two about electrical engineering, but so far Travis looks like Montgomery god damn Scott aboard the Enterprise.

Source: AMC

Jack and Alicia contact Connor, who says he’s inbound.  Alicia keeps prying about Jack’s role with the pirates, with all of the life or death urgency of a girl who’s just gotten her heart broken by the high school bad boy.  But while I may be a bit too old for the misty blue eyes, Jack has unwittingly fallen into a deadfall, believing that she’ll be with him, and sets her free.  Back ashore, Nick feels no need to be stealthy anymore, dribbling a basketball as he approaches his destination.  Once he finds the house, he’s startled by the henchman from the Strand flashbacks, Carlos.  I love how nonchalant Nick is about having a gun in his face, and he explains that Strand sent him.  As it turns out Carlos and Strand have gotten a bit cozier since their first meeting and he explains a bit about the Abigail business ventures to Nick.  Carlos loads up the car with presumably more guns and tells Nick to wash up, as he’s gotten walker blood on the ride.  Probably not too smart to use the ol’ spit shine to clean off infected blood.  But if everyone is already infected, a little coagulated blood won’t hurt right?

Source: AMC

Things get tenser on Abigail as Maddie and Ofelia try to get into Vida’s head, suggesting her baby is already dead and perhaps “one of those things.”  We’ve seen zombie children in this universe, but zombie babies would be a first.  Technically not THE first, but an interesting gambit so early in the series.  Nick being his likeable self, or Carlos being the friendly but probably very violent henchman, explains that there will be problems with the amount of people because they’re going to be joining a small fleet (“flotilla”) and that money will be exchanged, but that Carlos’ mother Celia is already there and awaiting their arrival.

Flashing back yet again, Strand and Abigail are poolside as we meet Celia.  It seems Strand has made himself a bit more than useful to Abigail and they are a bit more than business partners.  As they overlook a beautiful Mexican vista, Abigail talks of never wanting for anything after this project is complete.  Strand wants to talk about an upcoming meeting with a “council” to seal the deal but Abigail will hear no talk of business.  I surmise that this completed project is where our heroes are heading to, maybe without Strand? 

Just as Travis is about to start the boat, Connor arrives with a few new players to add to the board, if Maddie and Daniel and the rest are still going to make their move.  Connor presents himself as kind but not to be trifled with, and he takes Travis and Alicia aboard his vessel, leaving Reed with our new friends, Ben and Red, to guard the rest aboard Abigail.  This upper hand is short lived because as soon as Connor leaves, Ben hears Nick and Carlos on the approach.  Despite speeding bumpily aboard a raft, Carlos puts bullets right through Red’s brain case, then Ben’s.  Before Reed has time to react, our heroes set upon him, disarming and impaling him.  Chris takes particular joy in hurting Reed, for all those creepy step-sister comments.  Rightly so, but Chris is poised to become an even bigger sociopath than Carl.

Source: AMC

The situation now is this:  Carlos won’t leave without Strand, the group won’t leave without Travis and Maddie, and Strand won’t last much longer in open water.  And Daniel is a grumpy old prick who doesn’t like another man with a Latin accent aboard.

In our final flashback, we find that Strand is leaving to meet the council despite the travel warnings regarding the outbreak, and personal pleas from Abigail himself.  Strand assures the deal won’t take more than two days, but we know exactly how that turned out.  Thus ends the abridged history of Victor Strand.  But what of his future?  As he seems to stop treading water and float, Maddie comes to his rescue and we’re left to wonder how we’re going to get our other two wayward heroes back.

Despite a few logical stumbles I really enjoyed this episode once I’d seen it through.  Strand’s backstory was told in short bites but in such a way that answered all the right questions and raised a few more interesting ones.  His story certainly endeared him to those of us who found him more mysterious than threatening.  The action was short but sweet, with Carlos proving to be the only one of value in a firefight.  This is not to say that the rest of our heroes aren’t able to move and manipulate and change the playing field in their own ways.  But as I said earlier, either they’re going to wise up and have some more situational and tactical awareness, or this show can’t last very long.  Here’s hoping for the former outcome.


Written by A Play On Nerds contributor, Jerry Herrera - Lover of horror, sci fi, and fantasy in that order.  Semi-permanent Disneyland resident.  I'm at least one of the droids you're looking for. Twitter: @FrankenJerry - Instagram: @GeraldoPedro

In television, review, article Tags fear the walking dead, ftwd, amc, horror, the walking dead, twd, zombie, zombies
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Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. - "The Singularity" - Season 3 Episode 18 Review

May 2, 2016

The major headline going into this episode was the reunion between Grant Ward (Brett Dalton) and Daisy Johnson (Chloe Bennet). The two team-up like its 2013, only this time they're trying to thwart the efforts of S.H.I.E.L.D. together. We get glimpses of the chemistry that made SkyeWard so fun to ship; and in my case, cheer for a Ward redemption arc as late as mid-season two. There's just something about these two that's inherently hard to quit, and their newly formed alliance manages to hold our interest, despite feeling rather inconsequential. We know that Daisy's not going to join Hive permanently, so the stakes seem lower than they should for a twist of this nature. Still, the moments we get between our two former lovebirds are creepily enjoyable, and a nice payoff for the shows' questionable decision to keep Ward around for another half season.

Source: ABC/Disney/Marvel

Hive spends most of this episode bolstering his ranks with powerful Inhumans, and after weeks of little buildup, it looks like his master plan is finally starting to take form. Team Hive carries a noticeable menacing presence - something that was missing last year from Jiaying and her followers, and Brett Dalton continues to deliver a strong showing, capable of quickly portraying different characters as Hive taps into their memories. Despite my misgivings last week, Chloe Bennet manages to hold her own, although the writers smartly buoy her most dramatic scene with the use of heavy special effects, which usually goes a long way in aiding her performances. It’s unclear how much control Daisy maintains while under Hive’s spell, and to her credit, that’s partly due to the ambiguity Bennet effectively captures in her delivery.

Superpowers are well on display throughout “The Singularity,” and we get a little bit of everything from the show’s current, returning, and brand new Inhumans. Overall, the action is solid per usual; however, there are a couple of confusing sequences towards the episode’s climax - encounters that seem to end too abruptly and without sufficient explanation, almost as if the show's budget ran out mid-shot. Running tangential to the events of this week, FitzSimmons’ "side mission" is awkwardly timed and detracts a bit from the overarching plot. We’ve spent most of season 3B with little movement on the FitzSimmons front, so to have back-to-back episodes placing significant focus on the two seems out of place in terms of pacing.

Source: ABC/Disney/Marvel

When a "will they, won’t they" situation finally “wills,” the dynamic of the fictional relationship in question changes, challenging our enjoyment of the characters. The months, sometimes years, spent waiting for two characters to finally realize what we, as viewers, have known all along, is truly one of the strongest bonds a fan can form with a television show. And when the stars align, the muses sing, and the "I've always loved yous" are finally exchanged, we're left with a sense of satisfaction that warms our hearts, almost as if we had a hand in bringing this sense of right into the universe, ourselves. But after the episode ends and the muses stop singing, the warmth begins to fade, and we're left wondering where the show goes from here. Our star-crossed lovers are together at last. Can their relationship remain relevant now that they've scaled the mountain? This is the problem that FitzSimmons now faces. Realistically, the writers stretched out this arc as far as they could without viewers turning on them. One and a half seasons of buildup is a lot in this Netflix era of binge-watching. This week’s FitzSimmons subplot notwithstanding, Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. has enough moving parts to give both characters substantial future storylines, either as individuals or as a couple.

Finally, in a "blink and you'll miss it" moment, General Talbot's ATCU apparently takes down Hydra’s entire remaining operation, with help from information turned over by a vengeful Gideon Malick. That's right, the Evil Empire of the MCU, whose reign spanned three seasons of S.H.I.E.L.D. and multiple feature films, is wiped off the face of the Earth with close to zero on screen acknowledgement and just a few lines of dialogue. It’s puzzling that such a huge component of the show faces such a swift and quiet exit. It’s likely that this is just a minor roadblock, and Hydra will resurface again soon in typical Hydra fashion. But if this truly is the end, it’s been a good ride for a group of evildoers that erred a little too close to the generic side, but more than made up for it with a strong flair for the dramatic

Source: ABC/Disney/Marvel

With three weeks to go, we’re officially entering the home stretch of season three. The Captain America: Civil War crossover airs on May 10th, which means we’ll get at least one more episode dedicated solely to Daisy and the “Fallen Agent” arc. ABC is pushing the “who dies” angle like crazy, and it’s hard to imagine AoS sticking the landing on such a telegraphed ending. Regardless, the ride has been a lot of fun so far, and I’m excited to see where the writers take us. There haven’t been a ton of home runs in this second half of episodes - we most likely saw the season’s best hour back in October with the Simmons-centric “4,722 Hours.” However, consistency is important for a show whose quality can sometimes get swept up in peaks and valleys.


Garrett Yoshitomi is a contributor for A Play on Nerds. He covers Marvel films and television, and enjoys fantasy baseball, Big Brother live feeds, and Anna Kendrick. You can find his tweets @garrettweets

In television, review, article Tags agents of shield, AoS, abc, marvel, marvel cinematic universe, mcu
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